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Dive into the research topics where Lawrence A. Symons is active.

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Featured researches published by Lawrence A. Symons.


Perception | 2000

The face-inversion effect as a deficit in the encoding of configural information: direct evidence.

Alejo Freire; Kang Lee; Lawrence A. Symons

We report four experiments leading to conclusions that: (i) the face-inversion effect is mainly due to the deficits in processing of configural information from inverted faces; and (ii) this effect occurs primarily at the encoding stage of face processing, rather than at the storage stage. In experiment 1, participants discriminated upright faces differing primarily in configuration with 81% accuracy. Participants viewing the same faces presented upside down scored only 55%. In experiment 2, the corresponding discrimination rates for faces differing mainly in featural information were 91% (upright) and 90% (inverted). In experiments 3 and 4, the same faces were used in a memory paradigm. In experiment 3, a delayed matching-to-sample task was used, in which upright-face pairs differed either in configuration or features. Recognition rates were comparable to those for the corresponding upright faces in the discrimination tasks in experiments 1 and 2. However, there was no effect of delay (1 s, 5 s, or 10 s). In experiment 4, we repeated experiment 3, this time with inverted faces. Results were comparable to those of inverted conditions in experiments 1 and 2, and again there was no effect of delay. Together these results suggest that an ‘encoding bottleneck’ for configural information may be responsible for the face-inversion effect in particular, and memory for faces in general.


Behavioural Brain Research | 1996

A neurological dissociation between shape from shading and shape from edges

G. Keith Humphrey; Lawrence A. Symons; Andrew M. Herbert; Melvyn A. Goodale

We studied the ability of a neurological patient, who has deficits in various aspects of form perception, to perform region segregation tasks requiring discriminations based on several image properties that are related to the three-dimensional structure of objects. The patient could discriminate the apparent three-dimensional structure and orientation of shapes defined by shading gradients, but could not make such discriminations for shapes in which edges were depicted as lines or as luminance discontinuities. These results suggest that the neural pathways that compute shape from shading gradients may be independent of those that compute shape based on edges, and, based on the patients pattern of brain damage, they also indicate a relatively early functional separation in the requisite inputs.


Perception | 1996

The Aftereffect to Relative Motion Does Not Show Interocular Transfer

Lawrence A. Symons; Pauline Pearson; Brian Timney

The motion aftereffect is strongest after viewing a moving field embedded in a patterned stationary surround, which suggests that relative motion is an important signal for its generation. The contribution of relative motion to binocular aspects of the motion aftereffect was assessed. Subjects viewed uniformly moving random dots surrounded by a stationary random-dot annulus. These displays could be presented in a variety of combinations to each eye separately or to both eyes, during adaptation and test. It was found that, although the presence of relative motion during adaptation significantly extended the duration of the monocular motion aftereffect, it did not augment interocular transfer. The presence of stationary surround contours in the nonadapting eye did not influence the aftereffect in the adapting eye. The enhancement provided by stationary surround contours is largely dependent on their presence during adaptation. The presence or absence of surround contours during the test phase did not influence the duration of the aftereffect. These findings are consistent with previous suggestions that the motion aftereffect is, in part, the result of adaptation to relative motion that occurs relatively early in the visual pathway—before binocular integration.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2000

Orientation tuning of shapefrom shading

Lawrence A. Symons; Faye Cuddy; Keith Humphrey

Four experiments were performed to assess the effect of different orientations and direction of lighting on the visual processing of shaded or bipartite disks. In the first two experiments, observers were presented with nine different shading orientations from 0° to 180°. Targets were detected in a rapid and parallel fashion for shaded disks when the orientation of the shading gradient was not horizontal (90°) or oriented at 67.5°. Search asymmetries favoring the detection of “pock” targets over “ball” targets were found for all orientations. The search rates for bipartite disks were similar to the shaded disks at 0°, 22.5°, and 90° but not for intermediate orientations, and no search asymmetries were found. These differences suggest that shaded displays and bipartite displays are processed by different underlying mechanisms. The third experiment showed that the direction of the light source (left or right) had no influence on search asymmetries around the 90° point. Shading gradient orientation affected magnitude estimates of depth in the fourth experiment. These experiments show that the visual system’s “as-sumption” of overhead lighting is broadly tuned.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 1994

Text-contingent color aftereffects: A reexamination

G. Keith Humphrey; D. Skowbo; Lawrence A. Symons; Andrew M. Herbert; Christina L. Grant

Five experiments reexamined color aftereffects contingent on the semantic properties of text (Allan, Siegel, Collins, & MacQueen, 1989). The influence of different assessment techniques and the effect of eye movements and overlapping contour information on the induction of color aftereffects by word and nonword letter strings were determined. Experiment 1 showed that no aftereffect was found when a traditional method of assessing color aftereffects was used. Experiments 2 and 4 demonstrated color aftereffects forboth words and nonwords, but only when subjects fixated the same locus during induction and testing and only when assessed with the technique described by Allan et al. (1989). If, however, eye movements were made during induction, no color aftereffect was obtained (Experiment 3). Induction to nontext patterns with properties similar to those of text but with fewer overlapping contours resulted in a strong color aftereffect (Experiment 5). These results suggest that the color aftereffect contingent on text is very weak and is not dependent on semantic factors, but that it is a product of induction to local color and orientation information.


Infant Behavior & Development | 1998

Look at me: five-month-old infants' sensitivity to very small deviations in eye-gaze during social interactions

Lawrence A. Symons; Sylvia M. J. Hains; Darwin W. Muir


Developmental Psychology | 1998

Children's Use of Triadic Eye Gaze Information for "Mind Reading"

Kang Lee; Michelle Eskritt; Lawrence A. Symons; Darwin W. Muir


Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 1994

McCollough effect to "form": A local phenomenon.

G. Keith Humprey; Andrew M. Herbert; Lawrence A. Symons; Sukayna Kara


Infant Behavior & Development | 1996

5-month-olds' sensitivity to adult eye direction in dyadic interactions

Lawrence A. Symons; Sylvia M. J. Hains; S. Dawson; Darwin W. Muir


Infant Behavior & Development | 1998

Which components of adult stimulation drive young infants' social responses?

Barbara D'Entremont; Sylvia M. J. Hains; Lawrence A. Symons; Darwin W. Muir

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Kang Lee

University of Toronto

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Andrew M. Herbert

Rochester Institute of Technology

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G. Keith Humphrey

University of Western Ontario

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Brian Timney

University of Western Ontario

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Christina L. Grant

University of Western Ontario

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